• <nav id="c8c2c"></nav>
      • <tfoot id="c8c2c"><noscript id="c8c2c"></noscript></tfoot>
      • <tfoot id="c8c2c"><noscript id="c8c2c"></noscript></tfoot>
      • <nav id="c8c2c"><sup id="c8c2c"></sup></nav>
        <tr id="c8c2c"></tr>
      • a级毛片av无码,久久精品人人爽人人爽,国产r级在线播放,国产在线高清一区二区

          .contact us |.about us
        News > International News ... ...
        Search:
            Advertisement
        AP: Bush paper details Iraq spending plan
        ( 2003-09-23 08:54) (Agencies)

        The administration wants $100 million for an Iraqi witness protection program, $290 million to hire, train and house thousands of firefighters, $9 million to modernize the postal service, including establishment of ZIP codes.

        A Bush administration document, distributed to members of Congress and obtained by The Associated Press, goes far beyond the details officials have publicly provided for how they would spend the $20.3 billion they have requested for Iraqi reconstruction.

        The 53 pages of justifications flesh out the size of the task of rebuilding the country, almost literally brick by brick. It also paints a painstaking picture of the damage Iraq has suffered.

        "The war and subsequent looting destroyed over 165 firehouses throughout the country. There are no tools or equipment in any firehouse," according to the report, written by the Coalition Provisional Authority, the U.S.-led organization now running Iraq.

        The report's estimated cost of rebuilding Iraq's fire service, including hiring and training 5,000 firefighters: $290 million.

        At another point, the report says the headquarters and three regional offices of the border police "will require complete renovation." Two thousand new recruits must be trained because the agency previously used conscripts, "almost all of whom deserted."

        Reviving that and other border protection agencies should cost $150 million, the report said.

        The proposal was part of the $87 billion plan that President Bush sent Congress on Sept. 7 for Iraq and Afghanistan. The biggest piece of that package was $66 billion to finance U.S. military operations in both countries and elsewhere.

        "Expeditious approval of this emergency appropriation is critical for the coalition to lay the groundwork for an Iraq governed by and for the people of Iraq, to serve as the model for democracy in the Mideast and to help fight the global war on terrorism by providing an alternative framework for governance," the request states.

        Congress, just beginning work on Bush's proposal, is expected to approve it largely intact. But the political soft spot has been the $20.3 billion for reconstruction, because of record federal deficits facing this country and demands by Democrats for increased domestic security spending.

        "The administration fought against a $200 million boost for America's police officers, firefighters and paramedics," Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., said Monday at a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing. "But Iraqi first responders would get $290 million through this" Bush proposal.

        Byrd made his comments at a hearing where L. Paul Bremer, the U.S. administrator in Iraq, testified that the plan would help prevent terrorists from establishing a foothold there.

        Other projects and their estimated costs listed in the report include:

        _Spend $100 million to protect ¡ª and perhaps relocate overseas ¡ª 100 witnesses and their families who testify against former government officials, terrorist groups or organized crime figures. "Without an effective witness protection program, it is simply not possible to prosecute these cases," the report says.

        _Hire, train and equip 20,000 guards to protect Iraqi government facilities, $67 million.

        _Retain 500 experts to investigate crimes against humanity by former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's government, for $100 million.

        _Build and modernize 26 jails and prisons for 8,500 inmates, $99 million.

        _Spend $9 million to modernize Iraq's postal system, including establishment of ZIP codes.

        _Rebuild the country's badly damaged electrical system, install at least 11 40-megawatt gas turbine generation plants and several larger units, replace power lines and towers, $2.9 billion.

        _Spend $55 million for an oil pipeline repair team that can respond quickly to new reports of sabotage or other problems, as part of a $2.1 billion effort to rebuild Iraq's oil industry.

        _Use $1 billion to provide drinkable water to 75 percent of Iraq's urban population, an additional 2.7 million people, up from 60 percent today. An additional $530 million would be spent to serve 75 percent of the rural population, an additional 1.3 million, many of whom now rely on water trucked in as infrequently as once every 10 days. Eventual goal: serve 90 percent of the population, $2.8 billion.

        _Spend $130 million to construct 10 major irrigation and drainage projects.

        _Use $125 million to rebuild railroad tracks.

        _Start building at least 3,528 new houses next year as part of a $100 million housing initiative.

        _Designate $150 million to start building a new children's hospital in Basra.

        _Spend $35 million to subsidize on-the-job training for private businesses.

         
        Close  
           
          Today's Top News   Top International News
           
        +Criticism about renminbi refuted
        ( 2003-09-23)
        +FMs meet for talks on co-operation
        ( 2003-09-23)
        +Unions' role in protecting workers' rights recognized
        ( 2003-09-23)
        +Commentary: Raising the bar for listings
        ( 2003-09-23)
        +Foreign scientists awarded top honour
        ( 2003-09-23)
        +AP: Bush paper details Iraq spending plan
        ( 2003-09-23)
        +US Air Force leaders criticized in Academy sex report
        ( 2003-09-23)
        +Brother of alleged al-Qaida chief caught
        ( 2003-09-22)
        +World leaders to discuss fighting terror
        ( 2003-09-22)
        +46 killed near Uganda-Rwanda border in bus crash
        ( 2003-09-22)
           
          Go to Another Section  
             
         
         
             
          Article Tools  
             
         
         
             
          Related Articles  
             
         

        +US policy on Hamas confronts Arabs
        2003-09-22

        +Three US soldiers killed in latest Iraq Attacks
        2003-09-22

        +U.S. asks for foreign troops for Iraq
        2003-09-20

        +Bush says handover cannot be rushed
        2003-09-19

        +Coalition may relax grip on Iraqi citizens
        2003-09-19

        +Former Iraqi Defense Minister surrenders-mediator
        2003-09-19

        +AP: No evidence Iraq stockpiled smallpox
        2003-09-19

        +Iraq ambush kills 3 US troops, wounds 2
        2003-09-19

        +Green GIs eyed in shooting of Iraqi police
        2003-09-18

        +Iraqis call for sovereignty as 'Saddam' Tape Aired
        2003-09-18

        +Bush: No proof of Saddam role in 9/11
        2003-09-18

        +Powell in Iraq
        2003-09-16

        +Powell: World should have stopped Saddam sooner
        2003-09-16

        +No solid evidence in draft on Iraq arms search, ABC reports
        2003-09-16

        +A look at U.S. daily deaths in Iraq
        2003-09-16

        +U.S. to offer revised Iraq draft at U.N.
        2003-09-16

        +Iraqi police chief killed in attack
        2003-09-16

        +US raids Tikrit homes, arrests 5 men
        2003-09-15

        +Powell visits Iraq, praises progress
        2003-09-15

        +US apology doesn't appease angry Iraqis
        2003-09-14

        +Blast destroys US military car, wounds soldier
        2003-09-14

         
             
           
                .contact us |.about us
          Copyright By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved